Google Scholar & LinkedIn: Supercharge Your … OA...Google Scholar & LinkedIn: Supercharge Your...
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Google Scholar & LinkedIn: Supercharge Your Researcher Profile UCI Libraries’ Open Access Week Drop-in Session Shu Liu Digital Scholarship Services Librarian [email protected]2017-10-25
A simple way for authors to monitor and display online citations to their articles and citation metrics, based on what is found within the Google Scholar search engine.
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Google Scholar provides citation counts for articles found within Google Scholar. Using Google Scholar Citations and creating your own profile will make it easy for you to create a list of publications included in Google Scholar. Using your Google Scholar Citations account, you can see the citation counts for your publications and have your h-index calculated. Depending on the discipline and cited article, it may find more cited references than Web of Science or Scopus because overall, Google Scholar is indexing more journals and more publication types than other databases. Google Scholar is not specific about what is included in its tool but information is available on how Google obtains its content. Limiting searches to only publications by a specific author name is complicated in Google Scholar. Source: http://researchguides.uic.edu/c.php?g=252299&p=1683205
Example profile of a UCI professor from Informatics, Computer Science, and Anthropology, https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=wyCIJfQAAAAJ https://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=4661
Example profile of a UCI professor from (Microbiology & Molecular Genetics,) School of Medicine, https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=xYoaEukAAAAJ&hl=en https://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=2406
Example profile of a UCI professor from School of Education, https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=fAT__O4AAAAJ&hl=en https://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=6314
Example profile of a UCI professor from Law, https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=GgDZ3eAAAAAJ https://www.faculty.uci.edu/profile.cfm?faculty_id=5592 Examples in arts and humanities are harder to find.
● h-index: a scholar with an index of h has published h papers, each of which has been cited in other papers at least h times. This index:
○ reflects both the number of publications and the number of citations per publication
○ works most properly for comparing authors’ publishing in the same field
● I10-index: the number of publications with at least 10 citations. This index:
○ is very simple and straightforward to calculate
○ is used only by Google Scholar
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[Ask audience], add: For both indices, Google provides “All” vs. “Since 2012” comparison. Citation counts and indices should not be compared between disciplines. For best results, use multiple tools.
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How to set up a Google Scholar author profile? Let’s Watch this 5-min video, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uND8iWABGoc.
1. Use your permanent email - personal Gmail account
2. Make yourself approachable with a photo
3. Add appropriate keywords (“areas of interest”) to see who’s publishing in your field
4. Monitor and clean up your data - keep it current & believable
5. “Follow” yourself - create article and citation alerts
6. Make it public
7. Link to your website
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Demo using my own profile if needed. Trick: to configure manual or automatic updates, click on + next to TITLE > Configure article updates http://blog.impactstory.org/make-google-scholar-better/ http://blog.impactstory.org/impact-challenge-day-3-google-scholar/
“Your profile is your LinkedIn page that describes your career history, education, and other related content you may want to publish. We have a variety of features that leverage your profile or others' profiles to help you meet your objectives. A complete LinkedIn profile can help you connect with opportunity.” - LinkedIn
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Company: the world's largest professional network with more than 500 million users in more than 200 countries and territories worldwide.
1. Make your profile public and yourself easy to find (customize your profile URL)
2. Use your headline as an “elevator pitch”: 3 keywords + 1 value proposition = headline success
3. Put a face to your name (add a professional photo)
4. Hook your audience with a compelling summary section: be specific, be upfront about what you want, prove your value
5. Make your profile a “trailer”: differentiate from your CV; be selective
6. Add some eye-catching content: showcase your work
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Add an exercise for creating a headline based on #2 for themselves. Headline example: “Computer scientist with a passion for undergraduate education and experience in conceptual modelling and research management.” “Consumer Marketing Expert with a focus on Strategy, Promotions, and Campaign Management.” First impression counts. LinkedIn states members with profile photos receive 14 times more views than those without. Your Summary is an opportunity to provide a 50,000 foot view into your career and studies to date. Don’t just use this section to repeat information found elsewhere on your profile. Instead, write a short narrative of your professional life and career aspirations, using some of the keywords left over from writing your Headline. Here are three tips to help: Be specific Don’t use technical jargon, but do provide concrete details about your research and why it matters. Make yourself a person, not just another name in a discipline. Anthropologist Jason Baird Jackson does a great job of this: “I have collaborated with Native American communities in Oklahoma since 1993, when I began a lifelong personal and research relationship with the Euchee/Yuchi people.” Be up-front about what you want Don’t beat around the bush when it comes to your professional goals. If you’ve done your job right, future employers, reviewers, students, and collaborators are probably reading your profile. Great. Now, what do you want to do with them? Let them know what you’re after, like scientist CW Hooker does in his Summary: “I am always interested in discussing collaborations and future opportunities.” Prove your value Finally, use your Summary section to describe what you’ve done and why it matters. Elizabeth Iorns, breast cancer researcher and entrepreneur, explains to profile viewers that, “Based on her own experiences as a young investigator seeking expert collaborations, Dr. Iorns co-founded Science Exchange. In 2012, after recognizing the need to create a positive incentive system that rewards independent validation of results, Dr. Iorns created the Reproducibility Initiative.” Right there is proof that she gets stuff done: she’s created solutions in response to service gaps for scientists. Impressive! http://blog.impactstory.org/7-tips-to-supercharge-your-academic-linkedin-profile/